Eugenia is a
genus of
flowering plants in the myrtle family
Myrtaceae. It has a worldwide, although highly uneven, distribution in tropical and subtropical regions. The bulk of the approximately 1,000
species occur in the
New World tropics, especially in the northern
Andes, the
Caribbean, and the
Atlantic Forest (coastal forests) of eastern
Brazil. Other centers of diversity include
New Caledonia and
Madagascar. Many species new to science have been and are in the process of being described from these regions. For example, 37 new species of
Eugenia have been described from
Mesoamerica in the past few years. At least 20 new species are currently in the process of being described from New Caledonia, and approximately the same number of species new to science may occur in
Madagascar. Despite the enormous ecological importance of the myrtle family in
Australia (e.g.
Eucalyptus,
Corymbia,
Angophora,
Melaleuca,
Callistemon,
Rhodamnia,
Gossia), only one species of
Eugenia,
E. reinwardtiana, occurs on that continent. The genus also is represented in
Africa south of the
Sahara, but it is relatively species-poor on that continent. In the past some
botanists included the morphologically similar
Old World genus
Syzygium in
Eugenia, but research by Rudolf Schmid in the early 1970s convinced most botanists that the genera are easily separable. Research by van Wyk and colleagues in
South Africa suggests the genus may comprise at least two major lineages, recognizable by anatomical and other features.